Bishop Gregory Brewer: ‘The Shooting of Trayvon Martin Was a Great Tragedy’

After only two days of serving as the bishop of the Central Florida Diocese, I found myself marching in the streets of Sanford, Fla., and speaking at city hall at a city commission meeting due to the developments following the death of Trayvon Martin. As a bishop, I am a Christian leader for a geographic region of 15 counties, not merely a group of churches. This meant I had to act.

While my responsibilities extend to 87 congregations, the whole region and all of its citizens are within my spiritual oversight. What happened in the shooting of Trayvon Martin mattered to me because it mattered to the people under my care.

With the George Zimmerman trial resulting in an acquittal, from the outside it may be easy to assume that our march was not needed. Some might say that this verdict indicates we should not have voiced our concerns to the city council. But that doesn’t tell the whole picture.

Due to the emergence of this case, the chief of the Sanford Police Department was forced to resign. There has been a clear pattern in the Sanford police department—a pattern of two levels of justice.

While my responsibilities extend to 87 congregations, the whole region and all of its citizens are within my spiritual oversight. What happened in the shooting of Trayvon Martin mattered to me because it mattered to the people under my care.

Christians should see what can be gleaned from tragedies such as this, particularly when issues like justice and fairness are concerned. While the incident was horrible, there is much we can learn from it.

As followers of Christ, we need a deep understanding that in God’s eyes everybody matters—regardless of race, age, education or economics. The compassion that God has for the whole world should be extended through Christians to people around us, not just those we like, or who are like us.

If we are committed to the Great Commission, then we should be asking, “Whom are we not reaching? Who is not being given the same kind of care and compassion that others are, and what can we do about it?” That is part of our witness to Christ.

This is what I hear when Jesus said, “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was sick and you visited me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was imprisoned and you came to see me.” When I read the Gospels. I get the sense that Jesus was particularly interested in reaching out to people who were not favored by local governments or even the local religious institutions. That is one of the places where Christian ministry needs to be exercised.

No matter how you look at it, the shooting of Trayvon Martin was a great tragedy in our community. In situations like this, we are forced to ask what role we should play. I was faced with this decision two days into my role as bishop. Looking back today, I stand by what I did.